What's So Baffling About Negative Numbers?

What's So Baffling About Negative Numbers?

What’s so Baffling About Negative Numbers? – a Cross-Cultural Comparison David Mumford I was flabbergasted when I first read Augustus De Morgan’s writings about negative numbers1. For example, in the Penny Cyclopedia of 1843, to which he contributed many articles, he wrote in the article Negative and Impossible Quantities: It is not our intention to follow the earlier algebraists through their different uses of negative numbers. These creations of algebra retained their existence, in the face of the obvious deficiency of rational explanation which characterized every attempt at their theory. In fact, he spent much of his life, first showing how equations with these meaningless negative numbers could be reworked so as to assert honest facts involving only positive numbers and, later, working slowly towards a definition of abstract rings and fields, the ideas which he felt were the only way to build a fully satisfactory theory of negative numbers. On the other hand, every school child today is taught in fourth and fifth grade about negative numbers and how to do arithmetic with them. Somehow, the aversion to these ‘irrational creations’ has evaporated. Today they are an indispensable part of our education and technology. Is this an example of our civilization advancing since 1843, our standing today on the shoulders of giants and incorporating their insights? Is it reasonable, for example, that calculus was being developed and the foundations of physics being laid — before negative numbers became part of our numerical language!? The purpose of this article is not to criticize specific mathematicians but first to examine from a cross cultural perspective whether this same order of discovery, the late incorporation of negatives into the number system, was followed in non- Western cultures. Then secondly, I want to look at some of the main figures in 1De Morgan’s attitudes are, of course, well known to historians of Mathematics. But my na¨ıve idea as a research mathematician had been that at least from the time of Newton and the Enlightenment an essentially modern idea of real numbers was accepted by all research mathematicians. 114 David Mumford Figure 1. Augustus De Morgan Western mathematics from the late Middle Ages to the Enlightenment and examine to what extent they engaged with negative numbers. De Morgan was not an isolated figure but represents only the last in a long line a great mathematicians in the West who, from a modern perspective, shunned negatives. Thirdly, I want to offer some explanation of why such an air of mystery continued, at least in some quarters, to shroud negative numbers until the mid 19th century. There are several surveys of similar material2 but, other than describing well this evolution, these authors seem to accept it as inevitable. On the contrary, I would like to propose that the late acceptance of negative numbers in the West was a strange corollary of two facts which were special to the Western context which I will describe in the last section. I am basically a Platonist in believing that there is a single book of mathematical truths that various cultures discover as time goes on. But rather than viewing the History of Mathematics as the unrolling of one God-given linear scroll of mathematical results, it seems to me this book of mathematics can be read in many orders. In the long process of reading, accidents particular to different cultures can result in gaps, areas of math that remain unexplored until well past the time when they would have 2Three references are (i) Jacques Sesiano, The Appearance of Negative Solutions in Medieval Mathematics, Archive for History of the Exact Sciences, vol. 32, pp. 105-150; (ii) Helena Pycior, Symbols, Impossible Numbers and Geometric Entanglements, Cambridge Univ. Press, 1997; (iii) Gert Schubring, Conflicts between Generalization, Rigor and Intuition, Springer 2005. What’s so Baffling About Negative Numbers? 115 been first relevant. I would suggest that the story of negative numbers is a prime example of this effect.3 This paper started from work at a seminar at Brown University but was developed extensively at the seminar on the History of Mathematics at the Chennai Mathemat- ical Institute whose papers appear in this volume. I want to thank Professors P. P. Divakaran, K. Ramasubramanian, C. S. Seshadri, R. Sridharan and M. D. Srinivas for valuable conversations and tireless efforts in putting this seminar together. On the US side, I especially want to thank Professor Kim Plofker for a great deal of help in penetrating the Indian material, Professor Jayant Shah for his help with both translations and understanding of the Indian astronomy and Professor Barry Mazur for discussions of Cardano and the discovery of complex numbers. I will begin with a discussion of the different perspectives from which negative numbers and their arithmetic can be understood. Such an analysis is essential if we are to look critically at what early authors said about them and did with them. 1. The Basis of Negative Numbers and Their Arithmetic It is hard, after a contemporary education, to go back in time to your childhood and realize why negative numbers were a difficult concept to learn. This makes it doubly hard to read historical documents and see why very intelligent people in the past had such trouble dealing with negative numbers. Here is a short preview to try to clarify some of the foundational issues. Quantities in nature, things we can measure, come in two varieties: those which, by their nature, are always positive and those which can be zero or negative as well as positive, which therefore come in two forms, one canceling the other. When one reads in mathematical works of the past that the writer discards a negative solution, one should bear in mind that this may simply reflect that for the type of variable in that specific problem, negatives make no sense and not conclude that that author believed all negative numbers were meaningless4. Below is a table. The first five are ingredients of Euclidean mathematics and the sixth occurs in Euclid (the unsigned case) and Ptolemy (the signed case, labeled as north and south) respectively. What arithmetic operations can you perform on these quantities? If they are unsigned, then, as in Euclid, we get the usual four operations: 1. a b OK + 2. a b but only if a > b (as De Morgan insisted so strenuously) − 3I believe the discovery of Calculus and, especially, simple harmonic motion, the differential equa- tions of sine and cosine, in India and the West provide a second example. 4For example, Bhaskara II has a problem in which you must solve for the number of monkeys in some situation, and obviously this cannot be negative. 116 David Mumford TABLE I Naturally Positive Modern units Quantities Signed Quantities positive integer # of people/monkeys/ apples positive real proportion of 2 lengths (Euclid, Bk V) meters length of movable rigid bar/stick meters2 area of movable rigid flat object meters3 volume of movable rigid object or incompressible fluid degrees (of angle) Measure of a plane angle distance N/S of equator dollars fortune/debt; profit/loss; asset/liability meters (a) distance on line/road, rel. to fixed pt, the ‘number line’ (b) also, height above/below the surface of earth. seconds time before or after the present or relative to a fixed event meters per second velocity on a line, forwards or backwards degrees (of Kelvin temperature Fahrenheit or Celsius temperature) temperature grams Mass or weight of an object gram-meters/sec.2 your weight on a scale force of gravity on your body= (a vector) 3. a b OK but units of the result are different from those of the arguments, e.g.∗ length length area, length length length volume × = × × = 4. a/b OK but again units are different, e.g. length / length pure number, area / length length = = If they are signed quantities, addition and subtraction are relatively easy – but modern notation obscures how tricky it is to define the actual operation in all cases! What’s so Baffling About Negative Numbers? 117 TABLE II First Second summand summand Sum Difference a b usual a b a b if a > b + (neg)(−b a) if b > a − (neg)a (neg)b (neg)(a b) b a if b > a + (neg)(−a b) if a > b − a (neg)b a b if a > b a b (neg)(−b a) if b > a + − (neg)a b b a if b > a (neg)(a b) (neg)(−a b) if a > b + − We write the simple expression a b, and consider it obviously the same as any of these: − a ( b) a ( b) a ( 1) b + − = − + = + − · but each is, in fact, a different expression with a different meaning. Given an ordinary positive number a, a is naturally defined as the result of subtracting a from 0. For a minute, to fix ideas,− don’t write a, but use the notation (neg)a for 0 a. Then note how complicated it is to define− a b for all signs of a and b. Starting− with a and b positive, Table II gives the sums+ and differences of a and (neg)a with b and (neg)b, Understanding this table for the case of addition seems to be the first step in understanding and formalizing negatives. The second step is to extend subtraction to negatives so as to get the last column. This is contained in the rule: a ( b) a b, for all positive numbers a, b. − − = + The basic reason for this is that we want the identity a x x a to hold for all x, positiveor negativeor, inother words, subtractionshould− always+ = cancel out addition.

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